The de Watteville Regiment in Red River
The Hudson’s Bay Company, a large fur trading business, owned vast tracts of land in the area now known as Manitoba. By 1812, the company had transferred much of this land to Thomas Douglas, the Earl of Selkirk. It was Selkirk’s idea to found an agricultural colony in Manitoba. He attempted to have the land settled by destitute Scots who had been pushed off their farms by their wealthy landlords.
The Northwest Company also was trading for furs in the unsettled territory. Their rivalry with the Hudson’s Bay Company often resulted in violence, including arson and even murder. The company opposed the settlements as they would interfere with their business.
When the de Watteville Regiment disbanded, Selkirk looked for armed men that he could hire to protect the settlers. He and his wife encountered members of the de Watteville and de Meuron regiments in Montreal, where the men awaited transport home. So, they hired about 50 veterans. Although most of them were de Wattevilles, as a group they became known as the de Meurons. Selkirk was especially interested in having what he called “Poles” take up land as he felt they would make excellent farmers. He attracted them by offering them more land than they had been offered previously at Perth and St. Francis.
Using their military skills, the de Watteville soldiers captured the Northwest Company’s trading post at Fort William. They briefly occupied it before heading further west.
Among the “de Meurons” was Andreas Korgto. Unmarried, he remained in the Red River Settlement until at least 1818 and is the only known Grand Duchy Lithuanian to live in Canada beyond the War of 1812.
The Red River settlement is significant in wider Canadian treaty history. In 1817, Selkirk and five chiefs and warriors of the Chippeaway or Sautaux Nation, and the Killistine or Cree Nation signed a treaty acknowledging the use of the land by the colony. Selkirk paid these nations for the use of the land with an annual quit rent of 100 pounds of merchantable tobacco.
This was the first treaty signed in Western Canada that recognized Indigenous land rights.